Badlands, Morning

Badlands, Morning
Badlands, Morning

Badlands, Morning. Death Valley National Park, California. April 3, 2014. © Copyright 2014 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Morning light on rugged badlands, Death Valley National Park

This was a different sort of Death Valley visit than usual. My typical visit takes a pretty uncivilized approach. I always camp, sometimes in the back of my vehicle so that I can be in the right places quickly. I virtually always work completely alone, aside from occasionally running into another photographer or two. With the exception of a restaurant meal or two, I typically eat one backpacker-style hot meal in the evening, usually after returning from an evening shoot after dark, and the rest of the time I “browse” on whatever I can have with me. To a non-photographer that may sound somewhat rough, but photographers understand that this keeps me mobile, “out there” in the field, and gets me to places I might not see and experiences I might not have otherwise. I’m fine with it!

But this time, my wife came along. Aside from the expected changes this brings—she isn’t a camper, so we stayed at Stovepipe Wells—it also presents the opportunity to see the area through a different set of eyes and to revisit some of the more familiar places that I might otherwise not photograph. In the “different set of eyes department,” she is an avid photographer of very small things, mostly wildflowers. A few years ago she began to come along on a few of my shoots and then to carry a camera. While I would be off photographing some Big Thing, she would be crouched down in the brush somewhere finding an amazing flower that I hadn’t even realized was there. (A bit later I’ll post a few wildflower photographs from this trip, including many photographs of flowers I would likely have overlooked if she had not been along for the ride.) In addition, since she had never been to Death Valley before, it was important to hit some of the iconic locations in addition to heading out to some of the less visited places that I know about. With this in mind, I planned a morning at Zabriskie Point. Zabriskie is, to borrow a phrase, an icon for a reason. Since I’ve photographed extensively in the park for a decade now, I don’t usually photograph there unless I expect something truly exceptional or unusual. But, let’s be honest, a new visitor to DEVA must experience a sunrise at Zabriskie, which is just what we did on this morning. This did give me an opportunity to engage in a little informal project that I’ve been playing with for a few years, one that has me pointing my camera away from the familiar grand view over Gower Gulch and Manley Beacon toward the Valley and the Panamint Mountains and toward some of the other geological features found here.

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more.
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

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